Book Scheduling

Recently, a number of readers have commented and/or complained about how long it takes between the time I finish a book and when it appears in print, often telling me or my publisher to release the books sooner. While the time delay might seem capricious or calculated for some nefarious reason, unfortunately, it’s not.

Publishers, at least my publisher, won’t schedule a book for release until it’s under contract, and I’m one of the few writers who won’t ask for a contract until I’ve usually finished the first draft of a book. Getting a contract through the paperwork of a publisher can take weeks, if not longer, depending on the time of year.

That’s one reason why it takes longer from the time I announce a book until it’s published, but I’m old fashioned in that I prefer to write a book without either time pressure or pressure from editors or marketing people to write a particular kind of book or to slant a book in one way or another. Also, while I announce when I’ve finished a book, I wouldn’t be surprised if some authors don’t announce a new book until it’s been scheduled.

The second reason is that spacing two similar books, i.e., two Recluce books, closer together than ten months reduces the sales of both books. Neither the publisher nor I favor that. As readers can note, this doesn’t apply to books in a different series, which is why Legalist is being released roughly three months after Sub-Majer’s Challenge .

The third reason is that Amazon and Barnes & Noble require at least a year’s advance notice of publication of a book, or they won’t commit to carrying as many copies. Although my books sell modestly well, no single book is or has been a “million-seller,” and that means Tor has to play by the rules of the big retailers in positioning when my books are released.

None of these reasons make eager readers happy, but they’re the facts of a marketplace in which I write, and while I did manage to get Tor to space the Recluce books closer together, that’s the limit of what I can do.

3 thoughts on “Book Scheduling”

  1. Chris says:

    Thank you for the explanation of why the release schedule is what it is. Of those, the only one that just doesn’t seem logical is the Amazon / B&N lead time requirement. At least in the case of Amazon, they claim to enable users of their platform (AWS) to be nimble, but from what I’ve seen that is not the case at all.

  2. KevinJ says:

    Fair enough, and thanks for letting us know! It’s all too easy for us readers to think that authors are in control, since they’re the names on the book, and the ones we’re following. But as usual, things aren’t so simple.

  3. Tom says:

    Why on earth would two different books in the same series show a sales drop if release dates are spaced closer together. Is this another modern fad? Or an indication of just how many poor there are in our number one world economy?

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